Day In a Page
Saturday, 16 April 1994
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News
News RSS Feed - click to grab the feedUK
- Death plunge
- Killing appeal
- Barman's gun killer gets life
- Futuristic car of the Fifties finds a place in history
- Extradition of GP 'could take a month'
- New Blandford charge
- Golfer suing former partners 'not the sort of man to cheat'
- Court told of booby trap on IRA van bomb: Canary Wharf device 'would have detonated if explosives had been moved'. Stephen Ward reports
- Man set fire to pregnant wife
World
- Onassis in hospital
- Nuns tell of machete horror
- Oppenheimer 'passed on secrets'
- Diplomatic refusal
- Harried Clintons head for clean bill of health: White House scandals wear thin
- Ellison dies
- Talks on Rwandan ceasefire
- Ciampi resigns as Berlusconi gains
- Assault inflicts crippling blow on Nato strategy
- Troops 'killed 32'
- Yemeni Jews describe their holocaust: Sarah Helm in Yehud reports on claims that Israelis stole 4,500 children from immigrants
- How to outmanoeuvre the West: The Serbs' assault on Gorazde has exposed the UN's threadbare policy, writes Christopher Bellamy in Vitez
- Flat Earth: Spring fever on the Moskva
- Charge of the test-tube rhino
- Flat Earth: Moral galaxy
- Old Tibet falls to Chinese wreckers
- Mandela's brave bid for Zulu hearts
- Russian 'armada' scare enlivens Black Sea saga: Helen Womack in Moscow on how Ukraine repelled the latest attempt to take over the old Soviet fleet
- Flat Earth: Civil ex-servant
- Flat Earth: Spotted: Muldoon
- Flat Earth: Frostbitten Butte
- School race row divides Deep South community: An Alabama headmaster has provoked outrage by describing the birth of his mixed-race pupil as 'a mistake'
- South African Elections: Natal surf and sand keeps conflict at bay
- Pentagon grounds aircraft in 'friendly fire' inquiry: Rifkind demands answers to 'painful questions' about how US downed two of its own helicopters
- South African Elections: SA muzzles the racist dog who lauds De Klerk: Fury as National Party uses prejudice and fear to win Coloured vote
- Jail for journalist
- Confusion whipped up in US over caning sentence: A media furore has arisen over Singapore's determination to give a young American a beating, writes Rupert Cornwell in Washington
- New government
- Radios for Prague
- Japan's clean team fishes for a heavyweight: Musical chairs in cabinet mark an end to Cold War politics, writes Terry McCarthy in Tokyo
- Lesotho inquiry
- HIV payments
- 'Franglais' outlawed
- South African Elections: Buthelezi 'must retire' after ruining peace talks: Inkatha leader provokes unprecedented attack by press
- Hong Kong attack
- Belgium calls for Rwanda pull-out
- EU heals banana split in time to rescue Gatt deal
- Union jacked
Voices
Voices RSS Feed - click to grab the feedLetters
- Letter: Briefly
- Letter: Briefly
- Letter: Briefly
- Letter: Briefly
- Letter: Crime is still linked to class
- Letter: Briefly
- Letter: The geeks have a word for it
- Letter: Kurt Cobain: an appreciation
- Letter: Crime is still linked to class
- Letter: Fanaticism is a feminist issue
- Letter: Eurobabble
- Letter: Help Rwanda heal itself
- Letter: What the best-dressed priests are wearing
- Letter: Gummer was right about birds
- Letter: Forget the collectivist past
- Letter: You get what you're paid for
- Letter: Soros and Quantum Fund
- Letter: Rear Window: Placing the rough with the smooth: State school boys at Eton
- Letter: Good books and battery acid
Life & Style
Life & Style RSS Feed - click to grab the feedFood & Drink
- Food & Drink: Gastropod
- Food & Drink: It's quite an amusing little ale, sir: Will it be a Bishop's Tipple or Pete's Wicked Ale? Michael Jackson pores over restaurant beer lists and finds many offerings that are a match for wine
- Food & Drink: Prost] from the best of Bavaria
- Food & Drink: How the west was wonderful: What are the ingredients of a fine restaurant? Emily Green went to Cornwall to find the perfect mix
- Food & Drink: A fistful of unforgettable flavour: Rosemary is the object of our cookery writer's passion, even though the herb can sometimes be hard to handle
- Food & Drink / Reader Recipe: A landlady has a good bash
- Food & Drink: Buy now while 1992 lasts: Anthony Rose urges investing in a case of one of the finest white burgundy vintages, whether for drinking now or laying down
Motoring
- Motoring: The auto didact of Paris: The head of Renault's design team explains to Phil Llewellin how he draws on instinct
- Motoring / Road Test: Nice and easy on the i: The new Renault Laguna scores good marks for looks, value, and executive gadgets. But it has the wrong letters after its name, believes John Simister
Arts & Entertainment
Arts & Entertainment RSS Feed - click to grab the feedMusic
- OPERA / Two cheers for Harry: Never mind the stunts - how did Gawain go on the night? Robert Maycock was at Covent Garden
- CLASSICAL MUSIC / Double Play: Monkey business
- CLASSICAL MUSIC / Best of friends, worst of neighbours: The composer Gavin Bryars salutes the saxophonist Evan Parker on his 50th birthday
- CLASSICAL MUSIC / Upbeat
- OPERA / Light hand through the darkness: Judith Weir's opera Blond Eckbert opens next week. Bayan Northcott profiles a composer of endless surprises
- OPERA / Pleasure in a dying fall: Julian Rushton on Opera North's new staging of La rondine by Puccini
Books
- BOOKS / Recommended
- BOOK REVIEW / Bookshop Window: The Miracle-Worker - Carmen Boullosa, Tr Amanda Hopkinson: Jonathan Cape, pounds 9.99.
- BOOK REVIEW / Bookshop Window: My parents - Herve Guibert, Tr Liz Heron: Serpent's Tail, pounds 8.99.
- BOOK REVIEW / Nailed to the stones of infidel faith: A Balkan Tolstoy: Hugo Barnacle on the heroic insights of a genuine modern classic: The Bridge over the Drina - Ivo Andric Tr. Lovett F Edwards: Harvill, pounds 8.99
- BOOK REVIEW / Wanted: old flames for new devils: Ray Monk on an amazing and ambitious view of recent philosophy's fight against the modern world: Modern Philosophy: a survey - Roger Scruton: Sinclair-Stevenson, pounds 25
- BOOK REVIEW / No Crocker gold in them hills: Godfrey Hodgson on an engaging memoir of life with humbugs and rascals: Going for broke - Russell Taylor: Simon & Schuster, pounds 9.99
- BOOK REVIEW / Petticoat governor: Christina Hardyment on a sympathetic biography of Uncle Tom's sprightly creator: Harriet Beecher Stowe - Joan Hedrick: Oxford, pounds 25
- BOOK REVIEW / Meeting God down the pub: The Acid House - Irvine Welsh: Cape, pounds 9.99
- BOOKS / Independent Foreign Fiction Award: Love, death and a Vietnam vet
- BOOK REVIEW / Tricks of a gamblin' man: Mr Vertigo - Paul Auster: Faber, pounds 14.99
- BOOK REVIEW / When white boys want to rap: Towards the abolition of whiteness - David Roediger: Verso, pounds 11.95
- 1 Bankers could face jail after report urges the Government to introduce new criminal offence for reckless management
- 2 Breaking the Silence: In the reality of occupation, there are no Palestinian civilians – only potential terrorists
- 3 Richard Nieuwenhuizen death: Six teenagers and 50-year-old father convicted of manslaughter in shocking case of referee killed over a game of football
- 4 Exclusive: Newcastle's star talent-spotter on brink as Joe Kinnear sparks walkout
- 5 Vast methane 'plumes' seen in Arctic ocean as sea ice retreats
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